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MEDICARE

MEDICARE. Pressure Ulcers: Stages and ICD-9 Coding Joanne Lynn, MD Quality Measurement & Health Assessment Group Office of Clinical Standards and Quality Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services September 28, 2007 Joanne.Lynn@cms.hhs.gov. Definitions.

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MEDICARE

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  1. MEDICARE Pressure Ulcers: Stages and ICD-9 Coding Joanne Lynn, MD Quality Measurement & Health Assessment Group Office of Clinical Standards and Quality Centers for Medicare & Medicaid ServicesSeptember 28, 2007 Joanne.Lynn@cms.hhs.gov

  2. Definitions • Pressure ulcers are localized injuries to skin and underlying tissues associated with pressure and also with friction, immobility, poor nutrition, hard surfaces, and existing scars. • The stages: • I – persistent erythema (no actual ulcer) • II – shallow ulcer or abrasion – skin remains • III – Through the skin into subcutaneous tissues • IV – To bone, tendon, or muscle

  3. STAGE I

  4. Stage II

  5. Stage III Stage III

  6. Stage IV

  7. Why (Temporarily) “Unstageable?” • Some lesions are known but not able to be examined at a particular time – e.g., under a dressing or not debrided • Some lesions are covered by an eschar or blister and best practice is to let healing take place until the skin breaks down • Some lesions are injuries in evolution, for which the eventual extent of injury is unclear until the dead tissue demarcates

  8. Why Stage? • Stage III and IV cause most of the suffering, care burden, and complications • Stage III and IV appear to respond well to improved practices • Stage I and II are (mercifully) much more common • Stage I is not very reliably detected • Combining all stages makes improvement hard to track

  9. For example – the National Nursing Home Improvement Collaborative • Three dozen nursing homes • Reporting data over more than a year • While improving care practices

  10. Stage I-IV Pressure Ulcer Prevalence Stage I-IV Pressure Ulcer Prevalence for Low-Risk Residents for High-Risk Residents 4 15 12 Nation Nation 3 9 Median Rate Median Rate Participating Participating 2 6 Facilities Facilities 1 3 0 0 2003 2003 2004 2004 2004 2004 2003 2003 2004 2004 2004 2004 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Year and Quarter Year and Quarter No Change in Combined Stages I-IV

  11. BUT – Major Reduction in Stage III/ IV

  12. NNHIC results

  13. Measurable Components of Quality • Assessment of risk • Mitigation of risk – prevention • Rapid detection, characterization • Low incidence, low prevalence • Rapid healing of Stage 2 • Aggressive healing of Stage 3 and 4

  14. About Measuring Quality Care • Stage I has poor reliability (e.g., dark skin) • Stage II incidence may respond only weakly to improved practices • Stage III/IV incidence responds to improved practices • Most Stage II can heal within a month • Most Stage III/IV can heal, but slowly.

  15. Multiple functions for CMS measurement • Quality measures • Quality monitoring and improvement • Payment • Pay for performance • Evidence of effectiveness • Practicality, burden

  16. Proposed Minimum Data • PU – Yes or No • Risk Evaluation timely – Yes or No • N at stage II, III/IV, and unstageable • N by stage, incident with this provider • N Stage II healed within a month • Length, width of largest Stage III/IV • Follow up on unstageable

  17. Reasons to change the Coding • To enable tracking incidence and prevalence of Stage III/IV pressure ulcers (which cause suffering and nursing costs) • Separately from Stage II (which are indicators of risk but much less harmful) • To treat Stage I as a risk factor • And thereby to enable cross-setting improvement activities

  18. The proposed changes 707 Chronic ulcer of skin (no change) 707.0 Decubitus (pressure) ulcer (no change) 707.2 Decubitus (pressure) ulcer stages 707.20 – NOS, unstageable 707.21 – Stage I 707.22 – Stage II 707.23 – Stage III 707.24 – Stage IV

  19. Support for the proposal • CMS – multiple op-divs (survey and certification, clinical standards and quality, Medicare management, etc.) • CDC – multiple op-divs (healthcare quality promotion, surveys, classifications) • Experts from the professional wound care community

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